Mike Majewski, of Woodbridge, Conn., holds the door for customers while carrying a pistol into Starbucks in Newtown, Conn. on Friday, Aug. 9, 2013. Many Second Amendment supporters carried their firearms into Starbucks on Starbucks Appreciation Day to exercise their right to bear arms and thank the company for allowing firearms in their stores, as allowed by state law. However, the Newtown Action Alliance urged gun owners to hold off, saying it is insensitive to the community that is still recovering from the mass shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School, just over a mile down the street.
Photo: Tyler Sizemore

Mike Majewski, of Woodbridge, Conn., carries a pistol into Starbucks in Newtown, Conn. on Friday, Aug. 9, 2013. Many Second Amendment supporters carried their firearms into Starbucks on Starbucks Appreciation Day to exercise their right to bear arms and thank the company for allowing firearms in their stores, as allowed by state law. However, the Newtown Action Alliance urged gun owners to hold off, saying it is insensitive to the community that is still recovering from the mass shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School, just over a mile down the street.
Photo: Tyler Sizemore

Shannon Doherty, of Sandy Hook, Conn., stands outside of Starbucks in Newtown, Conn. on Friday, Aug. 9, 2013. Doherty found it insensitive that many Second Amendment supporters carried their firearms into Starbucks on Starbucks Appreciation Day to exercise their right to bear arms in Newtown. The Newtown Action Alliance urged gun owners to hold off, saying it is insensitive to the community that is still recovering from the mass shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School, just over a mile down the street.
Photo: Tyler Sizemore

Robin Riley, of Sandy Hook, peers into the window as Newtown resident Diane Costallos, left, and her children Morgan, 7, and Cooper, 3, approach the entrance after Starbucks in Newtown, Conn. closed early on Friday, Aug. 9, 2013. Many Second Amendment supporters carried their firearms into Starbucks on Starbucks Appreciation Day to exercise their right to bear arms and thank the company for allowing firearms in their stores, as allowed by state law. However, the Newtown Action Alliance urged gun owners to hold off, saying it is insensitive to the community that is still recovering from the mass shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School, just over a mile down the street.
Photo: Tyler Sizemore

Customers gather outside of Starbucks in Newtown, Conn. after the store closed early on Friday, Aug. 9, 2013. Many Second Amendment supporters carried their firearms into Starbucks on Starbucks Appreciation Day to exercise their right to bear arms and thank the company for allowing firearms in their stores, as allowed by state law. However, the Newtown Action Alliance urged gun owners to hold off, saying it is insensitive to the community that is still recovering from the mass shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School, just over a mile down the street.
Photo: Tyler Sizemore

This sign was posted on the front door of Starbucks in Newtown, Conn. after the store closed early on Friday, August 9, 2013. Many Second Amendment supporters carried their firearms into Starbucks on Starbucks Appreciation Day to exercise their right to bear arms and thank the company for allowing firearms in their stores, as allowed by state law. However, the Newtown Action Alliance urged gun owners to hold off, saying it is insensitive to the community that is still recovering from the mass shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School, just over a mile down the street.
Photo: Contributed Photo